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	<title>Comments on: Segue Reading Series</title>
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		<title>By: Tim Peterson</title>
		<link>http://www.decontextualize.com/2009/01/segue-reading-series/comment-page-1/#comment-145</link>
		<dc:creator>Tim Peterson</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2009 04:12:02 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Hi Adam,

Yes, Vito Acconci is definitely involved in the event. Here is the updated announcement:

The Segue Series Presents

POETRY &amp; ARCHITECTURE
Vito Acconci, Benjamin Aranda and Robert Kocik

Saturday, April 25, 2009 ** 4PM SHARP**
Bowery Poetry Club, 308 Bowery, NYC
$6 admission
hosted by Kristen Gallagher &amp; Tim Peterson

What is the nature of the conversation between poetry and architecture today? In this event for the Segue Reading Series, poets and architects will present works exploring a dialogue between these two disciplines.

Vito Acconci will show an image-stream of built &amp; unbuilt spaces &amp; instruments as he reads: 1) about furniture &amp; houses (80&#039;s), cities &amp; landscape (90&#039;s); 2) from rules for assemblage &amp; incursion (00&#039;s); 3) architecture in words only (00&#039;s). Benjamin Aranda will present images and talk around the issue of self-assembly, where top-down methods for determining form and making decisions are complicated and sometimes replaced by bottom-up rules of formation. As in natural systems, the architectural structures up for discussion are not carved or composed in a traditional sense; they are grown through simple interactions to produce complex patterns that are both useful and buildable. Robert Kocik will present a plan for the Prosody Building, a note on mercenary poetry (without which business is biocide), Missing Civic Services, and a few architectural plans made entirely of words.
Aranda/Lasch

PARTICIPANTS:

Vito Acconci&#039;s design &amp; architecture comes from another direction, from backgrounds of writing &amp; art. By the late 80&#039;s he crossed over &amp; joined with architects to form Acconci Studio. They mix poetry &amp; math, computer-scripting &amp; sentence-structure, narrative &amp; biology as they range from plazas &amp; parks to buildings &amp; interiors to furniture &amp; products to clothing &amp;vehicles. They are currently working on a street through a building in Indianapolis, a building that twists from a courtyard in Milan, a makeover of a former strip-mall in Athens, Georgia.

Benjamin Aranda is architect and principal of Aranda\Lasch, New York, NY.

Robert Kocik, poet, essayist, artist, design/builder, lives in Brooklyn where he directs the Bureau of Material Behaviors. His architectural works are committed to the realization of &#039;missing&#039; functions, services, organizations, or agencies. He is currently developing a building based on &#039;prosody&#039; and poets&#039; imagined importance to our society. With the choreographer Daria Faïn, he has initiated a field of research called The Prosodic Body. His publications include: Overcoming Fitness (Autonomedia, 2001), and Rhrurbarb (Field Books, 2007).</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi Adam,</p>
<p>Yes, Vito Acconci is definitely involved in the event. Here is the updated announcement:</p>
<p>The Segue Series Presents</p>
<p>POETRY &amp; ARCHITECTURE<br />
Vito Acconci, Benjamin Aranda and Robert Kocik</p>
<p>Saturday, April 25, 2009 ** 4PM SHARP**<br />
Bowery Poetry Club, 308 Bowery, NYC<br />
$6 admission<br />
hosted by Kristen Gallagher &amp; Tim Peterson</p>
<p>What is the nature of the conversation between poetry and architecture today? In this event for the Segue Reading Series, poets and architects will present works exploring a dialogue between these two disciplines.</p>
<p>Vito Acconci will show an image-stream of built &amp; unbuilt spaces &amp; instruments as he reads: 1) about furniture &amp; houses (80&#8217;s), cities &amp; landscape (90&#8217;s); 2) from rules for assemblage &amp; incursion (00&#8217;s); 3) architecture in words only (00&#8217;s). Benjamin Aranda will present images and talk around the issue of self-assembly, where top-down methods for determining form and making decisions are complicated and sometimes replaced by bottom-up rules of formation. As in natural systems, the architectural structures up for discussion are not carved or composed in a traditional sense; they are grown through simple interactions to produce complex patterns that are both useful and buildable. Robert Kocik will present a plan for the Prosody Building, a note on mercenary poetry (without which business is biocide), Missing Civic Services, and a few architectural plans made entirely of words.<br />
Aranda/Lasch</p>
<p>PARTICIPANTS:</p>
<p>Vito Acconci&#8217;s design &amp; architecture comes from another direction, from backgrounds of writing &amp; art. By the late 80&#8217;s he crossed over &amp; joined with architects to form Acconci Studio. They mix poetry &amp; math, computer-scripting &amp; sentence-structure, narrative &amp; biology as they range from plazas &amp; parks to buildings &amp; interiors to furniture &amp; products to clothing &amp;vehicles. They are currently working on a street through a building in Indianapolis, a building that twists from a courtyard in Milan, a makeover of a former strip-mall in Athens, Georgia.</p>
<p>Benjamin Aranda is architect and principal of Aranda\Lasch, New York, NY.</p>
<p>Robert Kocik, poet, essayist, artist, design/builder, lives in Brooklyn where he directs the Bureau of Material Behaviors. His architectural works are committed to the realization of &#8216;missing&#8217; functions, services, organizations, or agencies. He is currently developing a building based on &#8216;prosody&#8217; and poets&#8217; imagined importance to our society. With the choreographer Daria Faïn, he has initiated a field of research called The Prosodic Body. His publications include: Overcoming Fitness (Autonomedia, 2001), and Rhrurbarb (Field Books, 2007).</p>
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		<title>By: Tim Peterson</title>
		<link>http://www.decontextualize.com/2009/01/segue-reading-series/comment-page-1/#comment-126</link>
		<dc:creator>Tim Peterson</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Apr 2009 01:46:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.decontextualize.com/?p=53#comment-126</guid>
		<description>Adam, thanks for your interest in this event! Here is the final info:

The Segue Reading Series Presents:

Poetry and Architecture
Featuring Vito Acconci, Benjamin Aranda, and Robert Kocik

Saturday, April 25, 2009 ** 4PM SHARP**
at the Bowery Poetry Club (308 Bowery, just north of Houston)
$6 admission goes to support the readers
hosted by Kristen Gallagher &amp; Tim Peterson

What is the nature of the conversation between poetry and architecture today? In this event for the Segue Reading Series, poets and architects will present works exploring a dialogue between these two disciplines.

Vito Acconci will show an image-stream of built &amp; unbuilt spaces &amp; instruments as he reads: 1) about furniture &amp; houses (80’s), cities &amp; landscape (90’s); 2) from rules for assemblage &amp; incursion (00’s); 3) architecture in words only (00’s). Benjamin Aranda will present images and talk around the issue of self-assembly, where top-down methods for determining form and making decisions are complicated and sometimes replaced by bottom-up rules of formation. As in natural systems, the architectural structures up for discussion are not carved or composed in a traditional sense; they are grown through simple interactions to produce complex patterns that are both useful and buildable. Robert Kocik will present a plan for the Prosody Building, a note on mercenary poetry (without which business is biocide), Missing Civic Services, and a few architectural plans made entirely of words.


PARTICIPANTS:

Vito Acconci’s design &amp; architecture comes from another direction, from backgrounds of writing &amp; art. By the late 80’s he crossed over &amp; joined with architects to form Acconci Studio. They mix poetry &amp; math, computer-scripting &amp; sentence-structure, narrative &amp; biology as they range from plazas &amp; parks to buildings &amp; interiors to furniture &amp; products to clothing &amp;vehicles. They are currently working on a street through a building in Indianapolis, a building that twists from a courtyard in Milan, a makeover of a former strip-mall in Athens, Georgia.

Benjamin Aranda is architect and principal of Aranda\Lasch, New York, NY.

Robert Kocik, poet, essayist, artist, design/builder, lives in Brooklyn where he directs the Bureau of Material Behaviors. His architectural works are committed to the realization of &#039;missing&#039; functions, services, organizations, or agencies. He is currently developing a building based on &#039;prosody&#039; and poets&#039; imagined importance to our society. With the choreographer Daria Faïn, he has initiated a field of research called The Prosodic Body. His publications include: Overcoming Fitness (Autonomedia, 2001), and Rhrurbarb (Field Books, 2007).</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Adam, thanks for your interest in this event! Here is the final info:</p>
<p>The Segue Reading Series Presents:</p>
<p>Poetry and Architecture<br />
Featuring Vito Acconci, Benjamin Aranda, and Robert Kocik</p>
<p>Saturday, April 25, 2009 ** 4PM SHARP**<br />
at the Bowery Poetry Club (308 Bowery, just north of Houston)<br />
$6 admission goes to support the readers<br />
hosted by Kristen Gallagher &amp; Tim Peterson</p>
<p>What is the nature of the conversation between poetry and architecture today? In this event for the Segue Reading Series, poets and architects will present works exploring a dialogue between these two disciplines.</p>
<p>Vito Acconci will show an image-stream of built &amp; unbuilt spaces &amp; instruments as he reads: 1) about furniture &amp; houses (80’s), cities &amp; landscape (90’s); 2) from rules for assemblage &amp; incursion (00’s); 3) architecture in words only (00’s). Benjamin Aranda will present images and talk around the issue of self-assembly, where top-down methods for determining form and making decisions are complicated and sometimes replaced by bottom-up rules of formation. As in natural systems, the architectural structures up for discussion are not carved or composed in a traditional sense; they are grown through simple interactions to produce complex patterns that are both useful and buildable. Robert Kocik will present a plan for the Prosody Building, a note on mercenary poetry (without which business is biocide), Missing Civic Services, and a few architectural plans made entirely of words.</p>
<p>PARTICIPANTS:</p>
<p>Vito Acconci’s design &amp; architecture comes from another direction, from backgrounds of writing &amp; art. By the late 80’s he crossed over &amp; joined with architects to form Acconci Studio. They mix poetry &amp; math, computer-scripting &amp; sentence-structure, narrative &amp; biology as they range from plazas &amp; parks to buildings &amp; interiors to furniture &amp; products to clothing &amp;vehicles. They are currently working on a street through a building in Indianapolis, a building that twists from a courtyard in Milan, a makeover of a former strip-mall in Athens, Georgia.</p>
<p>Benjamin Aranda is architect and principal of Aranda\Lasch, New York, NY.</p>
<p>Robert Kocik, poet, essayist, artist, design/builder, lives in Brooklyn where he directs the Bureau of Material Behaviors. His architectural works are committed to the realization of &#8216;missing&#8217; functions, services, organizations, or agencies. He is currently developing a building based on &#8216;prosody&#8217; and poets&#8217; imagined importance to our society. With the choreographer Daria Faïn, he has initiated a field of research called The Prosodic Body. His publications include: Overcoming Fitness (Autonomedia, 2001), and Rhrurbarb (Field Books, 2007).</p>
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